Physical properties of 39 sediment cores from the Bengal Fan and northeast Indian Ocean

We obtained sediment physical properties and geochemical data from 47 piston and gravity cores located in the Bay of Bengal, to study the complex history of the Late Pleistocene run-off from the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers and its imprint on the Bengal Fan. Grain-size parameters were predicted from core logs of density and velocity to infer sediment transport energy and to distinguish different environments along the 3000-km-long transport path from the delta platform to the lower fan. On the shelf, 27 cores indicate rapidly prograding delta foresets today that contain primarily mud, whereas outer shelf sediment has 25% higher silt contents, indicative of stronger and more stable transport regime, which prevent deposition and expose a Late Pleistocene relic surface. Deposition is currently directed towards the shelf canyon 'Swatch of No Ground', where turbidites are released to the only channel–levee system that is active on the fan during the Holocene. Active growth of the channel–levee system occurred throughout sea-level rise and highstand with a distinct growth phase at the end of the Younger Dryas. Coarse-grained material bypasses the upper fan and upper parts of the middle fan, where particle flow is enhanced as a result of flow-restriction in well-defined channels. Sandier material is deposited mainly as sheet-flow deposits on turbidite-dominated plains at the lower fan. The currently most active part of the fan with 10-40 cm thick turbidites is documented for the central channel including inner levees (e.g., site 40). Site 47 from the lower fan far to the east of the active channel–levee system indicates the end of turbidite sedimentation at 300 ka for that location. That time corresponds to the sea-level lowering during late isotopic stage 9 when sediment supply to the fan increased and led to channel avulsion farther upstream, probably indicating a close relation of climate variability and fan activity. Pelagic deep-sea sites 22 and 28 contain a 630-kyear record of climate response to orbital forcing with dominant 21- and 41-kyear cycles for carbonate and magnetic susceptibility, respectively, pointing to teleconnections of low-latitude monsoonal forcing on the precession band to high-latitude obliquity forcing. Upper slope sites 115, 124, and 126 contain a record of the response to high-frequency climate change in the Dansgaard–Oeschger bands during the last glacial cycle with shared frequencies between 0.75 and 2.5 kyear. Correlation of highs in Bengal Fan physical properties to lows in the d18O record of the GISP2 ice-core suggests that times of greater sediment transport energy in the Bay of Bengal are associated with cooler air temperatures over Greenland. Teleconnections were probably established through moisture and other greenhouse-gas forcing that could have been initiated by instabilities in the methane hydrate reservoir in the oceans.

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Weber, Michael E, Wiedicke-Hombach, Michael, Kudrass, Hermann-Rudolph, Erlenkeuser, Helmut (2003). Dataset: Physical properties of 39 sediment cores from the Bengal Fan and northeast Indian Ocean. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.648716

DOI retrieved: 2003

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.648716
Author Weber, Michael E
Given Name Michael E
Family Name Weber
More Authors
Wiedicke-Hombach, Michael
Kudrass, Hermann-Rudolph
Erlenkeuser, Helmut
Source Creation 2003
Publication Year 2003
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Weber_indian-ocean_sediment-core_physical-prop
Subject Areas
Name: Lithosphere

Related Identifiers
Title: Bengal Fan sediment transport activity and response to climate forcing inferred from sediment physical properties
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0037-0738(02)00187-2
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2003
Source: Sedimentary Geology
Authors: Weber Michael E , Wiedicke-Hombach Michael , Kudrass Hermann-Rudolph , Erlenkeuser Helmut .